Title
Transmitting silks of maize have a complex and dynamic microbiome
Date Issued
01 December 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Khalaf E.M.
Shrestha A.
Rinne J.
Lynch M.D.J.
Shearer C.R.
Reid L.M.
Raizada M.N.
University of Guelph
Publisher(s)
Nature Research
Abstract
In corn/maize, silks emerging from cobs capture pollen, and transmit resident sperm nuclei to eggs. There are > 20 million silks per U.S. maize acre. Fungal pathogens invade developing grain using silk channels, including Fusarium graminearum (Fg, temperate environments) and devastating carcinogen-producers (Africa/tropics). Fg contaminates cereal grains with mycotoxins, in particular Deoxynivalenol (DON), known for adverse health effects on humans and livestock. Fitness selection should promote defensive/healthy silks. Here, we report that maize silks, known as styles in other plants, possess complex and dynamic microbiomes at the critical pollen-fungal transmission interval (henceforth: transmitting style microbiome, TSM). Diverse maize genotypes were field-grown in two trial years. MiSeq 16S rRNA gene sequencing of 328 open-pollinated silk samples (healthy/Fg-infected) revealed that the TSM contains > 5000 taxa spanning the prokaryotic tree of life (47 phyla/1300 genera), including nitrogen-fixers. The TSM of silk tip tissue displayed seasonal responsiveness, but possessed a reproducible core of 7–11 MiSeq-amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) dominated by a single Pantoea MiSeq-taxon (15–26% of sequence-counts). Fg-infection collapsed TSM diversity and disturbed predicted metabolic functionality, but doubled overall microbiome size/counts, primarily by elevating 7–25 MiSeq-ASVs, suggestive of a selective microbiome response against infection. This study establishes the maize silk as a model for fundamental/applied research of plant reproductive microbiomes.
Volume
11
Issue
1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología Biología celular, Microbiología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85108586121
PubMed ID
Source
Scientific Reports
ISSN of the container
20452322
Sponsor(s)
This project was funded by generous grants provided to MNR from Ontario Genomics (SPARK Program), NSERC Discovery, NSERC Strategic, Ontario Ministry of Food, Agriculture & Rural Affairs, and Grain Farmers of Ontario (GFO). We thank Elaine Corbett (SPARK) for her enthusiasm and support of this project. We thank Todd Phibbs, Stacie Dobson, Katiani Eli and Darrell Galbraith (Ridgetown Campus, University of Guelph) for assistance with field trials.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus